ive te nayane krūte virūpe kṛṣṇapiṅgale |
kṣitau na patite kasmānmāmanārya nirīkṣataḥ ||
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Ravana’s eyes were cruel. They didn’t look upon others with compassion, as is the natural tendency. If there is a bird fallen on the ground after having accidentally run into a wall, others will look upon it with a saddened heart. The wing or some other vital part is broken, and nothing can be done to save the bird from the unhealthy condition. The same eyes look upon the poor and the downtrodden with pity, an emotion which then causes some action for redress to be taken. Ravana’s eyes had the wrong intentions, and so Sita wondered why they were still in its sockets and not fallen on the ground.
If there is a part of the body that is diseased, all effort is taken to cure it. For instance, if someone breaks their leg, the doctor will place a cast around it. This keeps the bone in place for a time commensurate with healing. Once the bone heals, the cast is removed. If treatment doesn’t work, the next course is removal. Like having a boil or unwanted growth on the body, the diseased portion needs to be removed completely, lest other negative affects arise in the aftermath.
Ravana’s eyes were crooked as well. If they were aligned properly, they would see the beautiful daughter of King Janaka and remember from where she came. If they were straight in their sockets, they would cause Ravana to immediately remember Janaka and Rama, both of whom were very pious. Instead, those crooked eyes, which were dark yellow in color, saw Sita as an object for enjoyment. They didn’t see that she was already married, that her heart was given over to Rama. They didn’t see her kindness, her sweetness, or her forgiving nature.
Ravana was fortunate in the sense that his eyes had the chance to see Sita. This vision is very rare. Her beauty is typically reserved for her husband Rama. This doesn’t mean that others can’t look at her, though. The devoted souls see her every single day, but the difference is that their vision functions properly. Their eyes are not diseased. The healthy eyes bask in the devotion shown by the sinless Sita, who loves Rama more than any person can love anyone else. Hers is prema, or real love, and not kama, or lust. With kama, the sentiment can turn on a dime. If the object of affection does something unpalatable, the previously professed love can vanish. With prema, nothing can be done to change the sentiment. Because of its nature, prema can only be offered to God. No one else can be loved unconditionally, without vulnerability to time and space.
Despite the chance to see Sita, because of his faulty vision Ravana viewed her in completely the wrong way. If he had just closed his eyes and heard her sound words of advice instead, perhaps things would have ended differently. She taught him in the way that a spiritual master instructs a disciple. But instead of being humble and inquiring submissively, Ravana was lusty and made demands. He forced Sita back to Lanka, his kingdom. She wasn’t bothering anyone in the forest of Dandaka, where she was living with Rama and His younger brother Lakshmana.
In Closing:
With eyes dark, wicked and cruel,
Faulty vision for Ravana the fool.
Compassion should have shown,
Treating her like citizen his own.
Instead Sita’s devotion tried to take,
As his own queen attempted to make.
Seen as beloved of Rama in vision pure,
Her love through infinite time to endure.
